Auditory Nerve l Flashcards

1
Q

What are the three characteristics that are encoded by ANF?

A

– Intensity
– Frequency
– Temporal pattern

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2
Q

How are the three characteristics encoded by the ANF? (3)

A

– Rate change (rate code)
– Place code
– Temporal code (phase locking

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3
Q

How important is the action potential waveform encoding?

A

AP waveform not important since there isn’t a difference (its either generated or not)

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4
Q

How is information encoded by an AP of a single neuron?

A

Single neuron can change the time rate and firing (rate coding)

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5
Q

How is the information encoded by AP of groups of neurons?

A

By produces an array of firing, spatial issues, frequency and timing

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6
Q

What is the refractory time of nerve fibers?

A

2ms after each AP

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7
Q

What is the maximal firing rate of actin potentials?

A

500 AP per second

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8
Q

How does the firing rate of neurons relate to Rutherfords frequency theory

A

Believed that the firing rate variation is what encodes BUT not true since they all have the refractory after 2ms so even increasing the speed that doesn’t match; can’t go beyond that number

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9
Q

What are spontaneous APs?

A

Action potentials that are generated without an external signal (no stimulus)

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10
Q

What are characteristics of spontaneous APs? (3)

A
  • The spontaneous APs are random in timing.
  • External signal may be applied.
  • However, if APs occur randomly, the neuron does not “hear” the sound. Or the sound level is below the threshold of the neuron
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11
Q

What does increasing the intensity lead to?

A

Increasing the intensity can see the action potential where firing rate increases

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12
Q

How can we verify a neuron’s response to sound? (3)

A

– Compare the spike rates between the two time-windows of equal length
– One window cover the period of external signal and the other contains no sound.
– If the AP rate in the sounded-window is significantly higher than the quiet window (by certain criterion), the we judge that the neuron is driven by the sound.

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13
Q

What kind of coding is this?

A

Rate coding (single and group neurons can do it)

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14
Q

How are fibers grouped in relation to the spontaneous rate of firing?

A

High Spontaneous Rate, Medium SR and Low SR (lower the SR, higher the threshold)

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15
Q

What is the functional importance of fibers with high SR in the graph? (circles)

A

It is inversely related to the behavioral threshold and may work for sound coding in different sound levels

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16
Q

What does it mean to have a high vs low threshold in terms of response speed?

A

Lower threshold = Quicker Response
Higher Threshold = Slowed Response

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17
Q

What is an example of a behavioral threshold?

A

Our audiology hearing test

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18
Q

What is the relationship between each of the SR groups to the threshold?

A

higher the SR, lower the threshold

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19
Q

Explain the location and SR likely hood of SGN synapses around each IHC. (Fiber A vs. Fiber B)

A

SGNs synapse around
each IHC.

Fiber A: at modiolar side:
likely to have low SR,

Fiber B: at pillar (OHC)
side likely to have high-
SR

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20
Q

For the IHC, which side of the fiber is likely to have a low SR? Which side is likely to have a high SR?

A

Modiolor have low SR;
Pillar (OHC side) have a higher SR

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21
Q

What are the ribbons and terminals of the synapse like on each of the modiolor and piller sides for the auditory nerve fiber?

A

The medial low SR have larger ribbons and smaller terminals

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22
Q

ANFs synapsing around IHC
show different SRs, Ribbons and terminal sizes from medial to lateral synapses: (2)

A

Medially synapsed: low SR ,
large ribbons, small terminals

Laterally synapsed: high SR,
small ribbons, large terminals

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23
Q

Fill in the chart:

A
24
Q

What is the rate threshold?

A

The sound level at which the firing rate is just above the spontaneous rate and when we can assume the firing is due to this stimulus

25
Q

What is a dynamic range?

A

The intensity range in which increasing the intensity increases the spike rate.

26
Q

What does the rate level function show?

A

How the spike rate changes with the intensity

27
Q

What is the change to indicate a dynamic response?

A

If the SPL change causes a spike rate change then there is a dynamic response

28
Q

Describe the graph shape of the high vs low SR:

A

High SR gets saturated and the low SR is more linear (which also means more dynamic range)

29
Q

What is the dynamic range of High -SR ANFs?

A

30-40 dB: if the threshold is 20 dB, thefiring rate increases until 60 dB, the saturated

30
Q

Give 3 characteristics of the behavior for high-SR ANFs. (3)

A

Low threshold,
Narrower dynamic range
Plateau at moderate sound level

31
Q

Give 3 characteristics of the behavior for Low-SR ANFs. (3)

A
  • Wider than high-SR units
  • Not really saturated at high sound level
  • Therefore more capable for coding in background noise where the high-SR fibers are saturated
32
Q

What is contradictory in hearing function evaluation to what we think we know about the low SR unit?

A

SR are the ones coding at high sound levels but there is just a small number

There must be another mechanism

33
Q

What are the two main ways that frequency is coded?

A

Place coding and temporal coding

34
Q

What is place coding?

A

Place coding is the ANF innervation of the IHC at different places along the cochlea and showing different frequency features

35
Q

What is temporal coding?

A

Temporal coding is the ANF changing the firing pattern based on the temporal information related to frequency

36
Q

What kind of curve shows the lowest sound level that drives the ANF to fire?

A

Threshold tuning curve

37
Q

Why is threshold tuning curve called by this name?

A

The threshold is changing with tunning/change of the frequency

38
Q

What is the characteristic frequency?

A

Frequency that the ANF has the lowest threshold (With this tuning, the tip shows the the frequency that spikes the ANF the most)

39
Q

Where should the neuron be recorded (which side) to see the cochlea’s high frequency CF vs low?

A

At the basilar turn its high frequency vs apical

40
Q

Which side has a more symmetrical tuning curve?

A

The Low frequency’s curves

41
Q

Which side has a more symmetrical tuning curve?

A

The Low frequency’s curves

42
Q

How is tonotopic organization shown what is the order like? (2)

A

Frequency selectivity and place coding since it goes along that order on the cochlea

43
Q

For the CF rate level function, describe the dynamic range following situations:

At CF?
Low/high frequency?
Which one has a lower maximum?

A

At CF- narrow dynamic range
Low/high frequency – more linear
Which one has a lower maximum?- the higher frequency (it starts to also just stop there)

44
Q

Based on the graph, how many ANF are represented?

A

This is one ANF but it responds for ones that are not its characteristic frequency

45
Q

When at the CF, what is the threshold like?

A

Lowest threshold, most sensitive

46
Q

When at the CF, what happens to the spike rate?

A

Quick increase with sound level

47
Q

When at the CF, around what point does it get quickly saturated?

A

Saturated quickly at a low sound level

48
Q

What is another way to describe the dynamic range?

A

Narrow so compression and non-linear

49
Q

What is the cause of the different rate level functions across the CF?

A

The OHC

“The different RLFs across CF are due to the OHC active mechanism, which is level and frequency dependent—it acts at narrow frequency region and at low-moderate sound - level dependent amplification causing non-linearity in RLF”

50
Q

How can the temporal firing pattern be shown experimentally?

A

Using a Post stimuli’s histogram

51
Q

Why are time bins used here?
What does prevalence mean in this context?

A

-PSTH count the number of spikes in each time bin after the onset

-Time bin- have equal time durations (the width varies with accuracy)

-The number of spikes in each bin represents the prevalence/occurrence of neural firing in timing with respect to the stimulus

-To show the prevalence in PSTH, we need to record responses to many repeated stimuli and add them together. This is because the response has randomness.

52
Q

What are the five stages that a tone burst goes through?

A

Onset peak, fast then slow adaptation, offset depression, and recovery

53
Q

At what frequency does phase locking occur?

A

Low frequency

54
Q

What happens in the other frequencies than low frequencies in Phase Locking? (3)

A

Sometimes the AP are missed
(1) APs occur in certain phase of sound;
(2) the certain phase does not necessary have to be at the peak of sound;
(3) APs may not exist in every cycle of sound; higher the frequency, more cycles will see no APs.

55
Q

Explain the location and SR likely hood of SGN synapses around each IHC.

A

SGNs synapse around
each IHC.
Fiber A: at modiolar side:
likely to have low SR,
Fiber B: at pillar (OHC)
side likely to have high-
SR

56
Q

Explain the location and SR likely hood of SGN synapses around each IHC.

A

SGNs synapse around
each IHC.
Fiber A: at modiolar side:
likely to have low SR,
Fiber B: at pillar (OHC)
side likely to have high-
SR

57
Q

What are the three characteristics that are encoded by ANF?

A

– Intensity
– Frequency
– Temporal pattern